Lake Bruin

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Lake Bruin
Lake Bruin (May 2013) IMG 7482 1.jpg
Location of Lake Bruin in Louisiana, USA.
Location of Lake Bruin in Louisiana, USA.
Lake Bruin
LocationTensas Parish, Louisiana
CoordinatesCoordinates: 32°00′22″N 91°13′14″W / 32.00611°N 91.22056°W / 32.00611; -91.22056
TypeOx-bow lake
Basin countriesUnited States

Lake Bruin is an ox-bow lake of the Mississippi River located in Tensas Parish in northeastern Louisiana. It consists of some 3,000 acres (12 km2) of unusually clear water, particularly suited for swimming, boating, and fishing. Part of the lake is owned by the state, which operates , one of nineteen Louisiana state parks.[1] Much of the land beside the lake is in private hands, and many fashionable homes, both vacation houses and permanent residences, have been constructed there in recent years. Many of the homes have piers extending into the lake.

Lake Bruin is the ox-bow lake for the St. Joseph area. Other ox-bow lakes include , located in Newellton and across the highway from the nearby Winter Quarters State Historic Site, and near Waterproof.

Lake Bruin is named for Peter Bryan Bruin (1756-1827), a native of Winchester, Virginia, who owned a large plantation on the shores of the lake and resided there for a number of years after 1807. He is interred near Bruinsburg in Claiborne County, Mississippi.[2]

Former State Senator Clifford Cleveland Brooks in 1920 purchased the Botany Bay plantation on Lake Bruin. He served in the State Senate from 1924 to 1932.[3] After Brooks' death in 1944, his widow continued to operate the cotton plantation.[4]

Area district attorney Jefferson B. Snyder, a St. Joseph native, maintained for many years a popular hunting lodge on Lake Bruin where he hosted a variety of governors, U.S. senators, surgeons, publishers, architects, local bootleggers, and African Americans in various occupations.[5]

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References[]

  1. ^ http://www.stateparks.com/lake_bruin.html
  2. ^ "Peter Bryan Bruin". lahistory.org. Archived from the original on October 13, 2010. Retrieved May 21, 2012.
  3. ^ , History of Louisiana, Vol. 2 (Chicago and New York City: The American Historical Society, Inc., 1925, p. 71)
  4. ^ "Linda Sibley Brooks Dubuisson". findagrave.com from Baton Rouge Morning Advocate, October 2, 1976. Retrieved July 22, 2013.
  5. ^ "Jefferson B. Snyder". New Orleans Times-Picayune. 15 April 1938. Retrieved July 22, 2013.
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